id,label,description,broader,icon
Action,Action,An action.,,1001
Agent,Agent,An agent.,,1002
Artifact,Artifact,An artifact.,,1003
Document,Document,A document.,,1004
Idea,Idea,An idea.,,1005
Material,Material,A material.,,1006
Place,Place,A place.,,1007
StillImage,Still Image,,Document,1008
Text,Text,,Document,1009
Image,Image,"In Bergson's language, everything perceivable or imaginable is images.",,
Body,Body,"This type indicates the author's body as the center of perception, whereas perception is a point in space and time:

> Psychologists who have studied infancy are well aware that our representation is a t first impersonal. Only little by little, and as a result of experience, does it adopt our body as a center and become our representation. The mechanism of this process is, moreover, easy to understand. As my body moves in space, all the other images vary, while that  image, my body, remains invariable. I must, therefore, make it a center, to which I refer all the other images.

Bergson, p. 46.

But also, this point has a dimension (diameter, time span, etc):

> What is, for me, the present moment? The essence  of time is that it goes by; time already gone by is the past, and we call the present the instant in which it goes by. No doubt there is a real present — a pure conception, the invisible limit which separates past from the future. But the real, concrete, live present — that of which I speak when I speak of my present perception — that presence necessarily occupies a duration. […] The physical state, then, that I call "my present", must be both a perception of the immediate past and a determination of the immediate future.

*Ibid.*, p. 137-138.

The measure of our almost-pont-like body is therefore the very small extent between the immediate future and the immediate past. Our body is also not different in nature from what it perceives; nevertheless, it is infinitely larger and more unique than that from our point of view, because it is the only gateway of information for the individual.",Image,
